56 THE BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB OF THE BRITISH ISLES. 
or F. J. H.) — -Augustin Ley. “AT. corymbosum, but scarcely type.” — 
F. J. Hanbury. 
Hieracium crocatum, Fr. Origin, Reapsmoor, North Stafford (Rev. 
W. H. Purchas); garden, 9th August 1902. I believe that this Reaps- 
moor plant was acknowledged to be crocatu 7 u by the authorities when 
discovered in North Staffordshire by the Rev. W. H. Purchas. — 
Augustin Ley. 
H. boreale, Fr., var. virgultorum^ Jord. Haugh Wood, Hereford, 
8th September 1902. I fear that these specimens are hardly worth 
contributing. They have broader leaves, of a deeper green, with much 
less hair at the base of the stem than in the type, but I have had no 
opportunity of seeing Jordan’s variety. — Augustin Ley. 
H, sp. Between Witton and Wensley, North-west Yorkshire. — J. 
A. ^VHELDON. “ I believe this to be H. triafigulare, Almq. = Lindeb., 
H. exs. 120, a frequent form in the West Yorkshire limestone 
district.” — W. R. Linton. 
Lactuca virosa, Linn. Sandhills opposite St. Thomas’s Church, St. 
Anne’s-on-the-Sea, West Lancashire, 20th September 1902. Growing 
with Sisy}fibriu?n pan?ionicum, Jacq., Ambrosia artemisiaifoHa, L., Vida 
villosa, etc. (See pages 39 and 46 of this ‘ Report.’) — Charles 
Bailey. 
Statice, sp. Gore Point, West Norfolk, ist September 1902. The 
salt marshes at Gore Point, on the north-west coast of Norfolk, yield 
several interesting sea lavenders. The locality is the headquarters in 
Britain of the rare Statice reticidaia, and there is a magnificent growth 
of S. Lhnonium which covers a large area of ground. In July, when 
the flowers are expanded, the plants present an unbroken mass of 
colour visible at a considerable distance. Forms of S. ocddentalis also 
occur, one of these now being sent for exchange. This grew in an 
isolated patch, the plants being noticeably smaller in stature, and simu- 
lating somewhat specimens in my herbarium labelled A. ocddentalis^ 
var. intermedia, Syme. It does not match that plant exactly, however, 
and Mr. C. E. Salmon, to whom I sent living examples, has reserved 
his opinion. It differs materially from specimens named interniedia 
by Mr. Salmon, and collected by him at Knott End, West Lancashire, 
last year, having much smaller and narrower leaves and panicle, and 
being generally of more slender growth. — A. B. Jackson. “Merely 
a state of ocdde^italisd — C. E. Salmon. “The fact is, this Statice 
differs in almost every county, and so much so that Sussex specimens 
can be picked out from Lancashire ones, but it has no fixed varia- 
tion.” — Ed. 
Limonium reticulatum, Miller. Sandy margin of Burnham 
salt marshes. West Norfolk, 25th July 1902.- — J. Groves. “Very nice 
specimens of a rare species. The reputed recurrence of this plant 
in East Suffolk was an error. I do not know of its having been 
